DEATH and the AFTERLIFE

Transcription

DEATH and the AFTERLIFE
DEATH and the AFTERLIFE:
EGYPTIAN ART
(Egyptian Funerary Art)
EGYPTIAN FUNERARY ART
Online Links:
The Book of the Dead – Smarthistory
The Egyptian Book of the Dead – YouTube
Book of the Dead – Wikipedia
Egyptian Book of the Dead Website
Book of the Dead - Metropolitan Museum of
Art
Interactive Animation of Nebamun's Tomb British Museum
The Egyptians did not make the
sharp distinction between body
and soul that is basic to many
religions. Rather, they believed
that from birth a person possessed
a kind of other self, the ka or life
force, which, on the death of the
body, could inhabit the corpse and
live on.
For the ka to live securely,
however, the body had to remain
nearly intact as possible. To ensure
that it did, the Egyptians
developed the technique of
embalming (mummification) to a
high art. Although they believed
the god Anubis invented
embalming to preserve the body of
the murdered Osiris, Egyptians
did not practice mummification
systematically until the Fourth
Dynasty.
During the mummification
process, the body was treated for
40 days with natron, a naturally
occurring salt compound that
dehydrated the body.
Then the embalmers filled the
corpse with resin-soaked linens,
and closed and covered the incision
with a representation of the wedjet
eye of Horus, a powerful amulet (a
device to ward off evil and promote
rebirth).
The Egyptians often placed other
amulets within the bandages or on
the corpse. The most important
were heart scarabs (gems in the
shape of beetles).
Ti Watching a Hippopotamus
hunt, relief in the mastaba of Ti
(Saqqara), c. 2450-2350 BCE,
painted limestone
A scene in the large mastaba
tomb of an Egyptian official
named Ti- a commoner who had
achieved great power at court and
amassed sufficient wealth to build
an elaborate home for his
immortal spirit- shows him
watching a hippopotamus hunt.
The idealized and stiff image of Ti
is typical of Egyptian relief
sculpture. Painters and sculptors
did not sketch their subjects from
life but applied a strict canon, or
system of proportions, to the
human figure.
Ti’s conventional pose contrasts with
the realistically rendered activities of
his tiny servants. He simply is, a figure
apart from time and an impassive
observer of life, like his ka.
Hippos, like the one hunted by Ti,
tended to wander off into fields,
inflicting untold damage on crops.
Killing them was an official duty of
members of the court. Furthermore, it
was believed that the companions of
Seth, the god of darkness, disguised
themselves as hippopotamuses.
Tomb depictions of such hunts
therefore illustrated not only the valor
of the deceased but also the triumph of
good over evil. Its killing stemmed from
the ritual magic performed by the
earliest kings of Egypt, who, in
harpooning the monster, recalled the
victory of the goodly Horus over his
maleficent brother Seth.
Nebamun hunting fowl, from the tomb of Nebamun, Thebes, Egypt, 18th
Dynasty, c. 1400-1350 BCE, fresco secco
Some of the best preserved mural
paintings of the New Kingdom come
from the Theban tomb of Nebamun,
whose official titles were “scribe and
counter of grain.” On one wall the
painter depicted Nebamun standing
in his boat, flushing birds from a
papyrus swamp.
The hieroglyphic text beneath his
left arm says that Nebamun is
enjoying recreation in his eternal
afterlife.
In contrast to the static pose of Ti
watching others hunt hippos,
Nebamun strides forward an
vigorously swings his throwing
stick. In his right hand, he holds
three birds he has caught.
Nebamun’s wife and daughter
accompany him on this hunt and
hold the lotuses they have gathered.
This is more than a simple image of
recreation. Fertile marshes were seen as a
place of rebirth and eroticism. Hunting
animals could represent Nebamun’s
triumph over the forces of nature as he was
reborn. The huge striding figure of
Nebamun dominates, forever happy and
forever young, surrounded by the rich and
varied life of the marsh.
There was originally another half of the
scene, which showed Nebamun spearing
fish. This half of the wall is lost, apart from
two old photographs of small fragments of
Nebamun and his young son. The painters
have captured the scaly and shiny quality of
the fish.
A tawny cat catches birds among the
papyrus stems. Cats were family pets, but
he is shown here because a cat could also
represent the Sun-god hunting the enemies
of light and order. His unusual gilded eye
hints at the religious meanings of this scene.
Funerary Banquet, from the tomb of Nebamun, Thebes, Egypt, 18th
Dynasty, c. 1400-1350 BCE, fresco secco
Another fresco fragment from Nebamun’s tomb shows a funerary banquet in which four
noblewomen (lower left) watch and apparently participate in a musical performance in
which two nimble and almost nude girls dance in front of the guests. When his family
buried Nebamun, they must have eaten the customary ceremonial meal at his tomb.
His relatives would have returned one day each year to partake in a commemorative
banquet during which the living communed with the dead. This fresco represents one of
these feasts, with an ample supply of wine jars at the right.
The words of their song in honor of Nebamun are written above them: The earth-god
has caused his beauty to grow in every body…the channels are filled with water
anew,
and the land is flooded with love of him. Some of the musicians look out of the
paintings, showing their faces full-on. This is very unusual in Egyptian art, and gives a
sense of liveliness to these lower-class women, who are less formally drawn than the
wealthy guests. The young dancers are sinuously drawn and are naked apart from their
jewelry.
Nebamun’s garden in the afterlife is
not unlike the earthly gardens of
wealthy Egyptians. The pool is full
of birds and fish, and surrounded by
borders of flowers and shady rows of
trees. On the right of the pool a
goddess leans out of a tree and
offers fruit and drinks to Nebamun
(now lost). The artists accidentally
painted her skin red at first but
then repainted it yellow, the correct
color for a goddess’ skin. On the left,
a sycamore-fig tree speaks and
greets Nebamun as the owner of the
garden, its words are recorded in
the hieroglyphs.
The pool is shown from above, with
three rows of trees arranged around
its edges. The waves of the pool
were painted with a darker blue
pigment; much of this has been lost,
like the green on the trees and
bushes.
Last Judgment of Hunefer, from his tomb at Thebes, Egypt, 19 th dynasty, c. 1300-1290
BCE, painted papyrus scroll
What we call the Egyptian Book of the Dead was known to the Egyptians translated as
The Chapters of coming forth by day. It is a collection of chapters made up of magic
spells and formulas. It was illustrated and written on papyrus. These papyri were
commissioned by the deceased before their death. Another translation would be "Book of
emerging forth into the Light". The text consists of a number of magic spells intended to
assist a dead person's journey through the Duat, or underworld, and into the afterlife.
It can be thought of as the deceased's guidebook to a happy afterlife. The text was
intended to be read by the deceased during their journey into the Underworld. It
enabled the deceased to overcome obstacles and not lose their way. It did this by
teaching passwords, giving clues, and revealing routes that would allow the deceased to
answer questions and navigate around hazards. It would grant the help and protection
of the gods while proclaiming the deceased's identity with the gods.
Old Kingdom Pyramid Texts on the walls of the
pyramid of Unas
The Book of the Dead was part of a tradition of
funerary texts which includes the earlier
Pyramid Texts and Coffin Texts, which were
painted onto objects, not papyrus. Some of the
spells included were drawn from these older
works and date to the 3rd millennium BCE.
There was no single or canonical Book of the
Dead. The surviving papyri contain a varying
selection of religious and magical texts and vary
considerably in their illustration. Some people
seem to have commissioned their own copies of
the Book of the Dead, perhaps choosing the
spells they thought most vital in their own
progression to the afterlife. The Book of the
Dead was most commonly written in
hieroglyphic or hieratic script on a papyrus
scroll, and often illustrated with vignettes
depicting the deceased and their journey into
the afterlife.
This detail scene, from the Papyrus of Hunefer (c. 1275 BCE), shows the scribe
Hunefer's heart being weighed on the scale of Maat against the feather of
truth, by the jackal-headed Anubis. The ibis-headed Thoth, scribe of the gods,
records the result.
If his heart equals exactly the weight of the feather, Hunefer is allowed to pass
into the afterlife. If not, he is eaten by the waiting chimeric devouring creature
Ammit composed of the deadly crocodile, lion, and hippopotamus. Vignettes
such as these were a common illustration in Egyptian books of the dead.
The scene reads from left to right. To the left, Anubis brings Hunefer into the judgment
area. Anubis is also shown supervising the judgment scales. Hunefer's heart,
represented as a pot, is being weighed against a feather, the symbol of Maat, the
established order of things, in this context meaning “what is right.” The ancient
Egyptians believed that the heart was the seat of the emotions, the intellect and the
character, and thus represented the good or bad aspects of a person's life. If the heart did
not balance with the feather, then the dead person was condemned to non-existence, and
consumption by the ferocious “devourer”, the strange beast shown here which is partcrocodile, part-lion, and part-hippopotamus.
However, as a papyrus devoted to ensuring Hunefer's continued existence in the afterlife
is not likely to depict this outcome, he is shown to the right, brought into the presence of
Osiris by his son Horus, having become “true of voice” or “justified.” This was a standard
epithet applied to dead individuals in their texts. Osiris is shown seated under a canopy,
with his sisters Isis and Nephthys. At the top, Hunefer is shown adoring a row of deities
who supervise the judgment.
Figures represented in order of appearance (left to right):
Hunefer (deceased scribe)
Anubis (jackal-headed god associated with mummification, burial and the afterlife, he
is the son of Nephthys)
Ma'at (goddess of order and ethical judgement. She wears a feather associated with
truth and is here shown at the top of the scales)
Ammit or Ammut (demon represented as part crocodile, lion and hippopotamus.
Devoured hearts that failed the test of Ma'at)
Thoth (here represented as an Ibis-headed god recording the fate of the deceased, in
this case Hunefer)
Horus (falcon-headed god/also eye of Horus, associated with the king and son of
Osiris)
Horus's 4 sons Imsety, Duamutef, Hapi, Qebehsenuef (associated with the 4
cardinal points, protection of vital organs of the deceased)
Osiris (enthroned wearing Atef crown; he is associated with death and is one of the
most powerful gods in the Egyptian pantheon)
Isis (goddess protector of mummys and Osiris and in some instances, the mother of
Horus and sister of Nephthys)
Nephthys (goddess who, along with her sister Isis, protects mummys and Osiris,
mother of Anubis, sister and wife of Seth)
The centerpiece of the upper scene is
the mummy of Hunefer, shown
supported by the god Anubis (or a priest
wearing a jackal mask). Hunefer's wife
and daughter mourn, and three priests
perform rituals. The two priests with
white sashes are carrying out the
Opening of the Mouth ritual. The white
building at the right is a representation
of the tomb, complete with portal
doorway and small pyramid.
Both these features can be seen in real
tombs of this date from Thebes. To the
left of the tomb is a picture of the stele
which would have stood to one side of
the tomb entrance. Following the
normal conventions of Egyptian art, it is
shown much larger than normal size, in
order that its content (the deceased
worshipping Osiris, together with a
standard offering formula) is absolutely
legible.
Section from the Book of the Dead of
Nany, c. 1040-945 BCE, painted and
inscribed papyrus
Archaeologists found this papyrus in
the burial of Nany, a woman in her
seventies. She was a chantress
(ritual singer) of the god Amun-Re
and is referred to as "king's
daughter," probably meaning she
was the daughter of Painedjem I,
high priest of Amun and titular
king. As was customary during the
Third Intermediate Period, her
coffin and boxes of shawabtis
(servant figures) were accompanied
by a hollow wooden Osiris figure,
which contained a papyrus scroll
inscribed with a collection of texts
from the Book of the Dead, known to
the Egyptians as the "Book of
Coming Forth by Day." It is more
than seventeen feet long when
unrolled.
The scene depicted here shows the
climax of the journey to the afterlife.
Nany is in the Hall of Judgment.
Holding her mouth and eyes in her
hand, she stands to the left of a large
scale. Her heart is being weighed
against Maat, the goddess of justice
and truth, who is represented as a tiny
figure wearing her symbol, a single
large feather, in her headband. On the
right, Osiris, god of the underworld
and rebirth, presides over the scene.
His body is wrapped like a mummy
except for his hands, which clasp a
crook. On the table before him is an
offering of a joint of beef. Canineheaded Anubis, overseer of
mummification, adjusts the scales,
while a baboon—symbolizing Thoth,
the god of wisdom and writing—sits on
the balance beam and prepares to
write down the result. Behind Nany
stands the goddess Isis, both wife and
sister of Osiris. She is identified by the
hieroglyph above her head.
DEATH and the AFTERLIFE:
EGYPTIAN ART
(Egyptian Funerary Art) ACTIVITIES and REVIEW